BlueDart - Again, another newbie who doesn't understand that the MAGNITUDE of this insider sale $40 Million) is much more significant that someone like Sheryl Sandberg at Facebook peeling off shares.

And FYI, Dummy, Sheryl Sandberg's (FB) sales were "Automatic sales" - they were pre-arranged. So sometimes insiders sell to early, because they have a prearranged selling plan agreed upon months/years before when they had no idea how high Facebook's shares would go.

Evan Clark Williams, a major owner of Twitter and a director of the company, recently disposed of 852,000 shares of the company. The disposals took place at prices ranging from $47.88 to $48.62 per share, on dates ranging from February 18 to February 19, 2015.

In an SEC filing today, Point72 Asset management sold most of its stake in Twitter (Nasdaq: TWTR). Holdings were slashed from $122.1M to $16.6M.

Point72 Asset Management, formerly known #$%$.A.C. Capital Advisors, is run by Billionaire Steven A. Cohen who is worth about $14 billion. That's more than half of the net worth of George Soros or Carl Icahn.

If Steven Cohen is taking profits in TWTR, he's no doubt, the "smart money..." He obviously thinks the good money has already been made on TWTR.

Ummm... You're looking at today's chart upside down... TWTR lost 1% on an up day for the markets.

Have you ever learned the trading concept of poor "relative strength?"

The stock underperformed the market today. That's an indicator that there's more sellers than buyers. Tomorrow is a new day, but I wouldn't be buying TWTR here at this juncture. Smart money is selling into Cramer's pump job.

Yeah, they sucked in the last few sheeple into buying at the opening bell . That caused the spike. Now it's selling off as their cronies unload into the liquidity. Should close below $48 today and then gap down tomorrow as the market starts to sell off. The Greece issue is bigger than many people think: Greece will default on their huge loans and the underwriters of those loans are overextended as it is, so we'll see a contagion spreading with large defaults.

And how do you rationalize TWTR's slow MAU growth from a long perspective. It just doesn't seem like their MAUs are going to justify the hyper-growth PE TWTR is sporting for much longer. This isn't a hyper-growth company.

Good point, but in the same way, my point is that it's ALSO a fool's folly to presume to know that the trend can continue.

After a healthy gain, it's always good to start taking profits when a stock has spiked up dramatically and is prone to profit-taking at the slightest downturn by folks like you who think in terms of platitudes like "Let your winners run and be QUICK TO SELL YOUR LOSERS"

So if TWTR turns down on when the market opens this week, will you be "QUICK to sell" because it's starting to look like your money will be left on the table?

I've, too, have spent many years trading options and have made and lost millions. Life lesson: Learn to recognize extremes. Logical analysis as I've presented above is not "praying" - thank you for trying to offer your unsolicited advice.

Oh, and by the way, isn't hoping/praying for a management change to pop the stock to $53 precisely what you preached against two sentences prior?

Different opinions (such as yours) are what makes a market.

I've learned not to be a premature short, but to short extreme parabolic spikes AFTER a short squeeze and margin calls have played out. Has worked quite well for me.

Combine that with an overbought (stochastics) market -- and there's higher likelihood of a down day in the markets to assist your short position. I never short a stock unless the market is simultaneously toppy.

As an old friend (actually a relative of Charles Dow) once told me: Leave the last 10% of a run-up to the other guy...

TWTR is precisely at that juncture, so longs hanging on for another 3-5% gain from here are risking leaving money on the table.

Markets rallied on the Greek deal, but there is another meeting on Monday which could add volatility when the markets open on Tuesday.

The past 5 days have been significantly supported by MARGIN CALLS for shorts that got burned on the earnings spike. As of today, 99% of those SHORT MARGIN CALLS will be done (e.g. no more forced liquidations by the brokerages because margined longs either lightened up their TWTR holdings or were forcibly liquidated).

Brokerages usually give 3-4, sometimes 5 days to wire in funds or be liquidated...

After that, what is left to buoy that stock without further short covering? The stock would have to go up significantly higher from here to flush our more shorts.

Many stocks that experience short squeezes then implode right after the last SHORT MARGIN CALLS are played out simply because there's no more short-covering to propel the stock higher.

Combine that with the fact that the NASDAQ has become short-term way overbought, it made for a good short entry in TWTR today.

Expect some retracement next week to fill the gap -- or at least trade back into the gap.

And the past 5 days have been MARGIN CALLS for shorts that got burned on the earnings spike. As of today, 99% of those SHORT MARGIN CALLS will be done (e.g. no more forced liquidations by the brokerage.

After that, what is left to buoy that stock without further short covering? The stock would have to go up significantly higher from here to flush our more shorts.

Many stocks that experience short squeezes then implode right after the last SHORT MARGIN CALLS are played out simply because there's no more short-covering to propel the stock higher.

Combine that with the fact that the NASDAQ has become short-term way overbought, it makes for a good short entry in TWTR today. Expect some retracement next week to fill the gap -- or at least trade back into the gap.

Investor's Business Daily now has an article on AMBA at 7:04 PM EST, so they're onto it. Inv. Business Daily must've also listened to the AMBA presentation at the Stifel Investors Conference yesterday because a lot of info in the article seems to come from that conference...

AMBA makes the video chips for ALL of GOPRO'S cameras, but is also diversified and their security camera niche is growing EVEN FASTER than the action wearable camera niche.

Nope, they just finished "gunning for stop-loss orders" to accumulate for a run up late today or tomorrow... Now, AMBA is bouncing back and in the green.

Wouldn't be surprised if other analysts who listened to the Stifel presentation want to get in position today before issuing favorable commentary tomorrow before the open. Since the presentation was after the close yesterday, there was no time to accumulate.

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